Financial Safety
The Upsides to Russia's
Ruble Collapse
Dec. 22 2014 00:00
Last edited 11:16
In early
December, President Vladimir Putin delivered his annual address to the
Federal Assembly. I believe anybody reading this column would have been able
to shorten that speech to just one or two words; awful or really
awful (I'm being polite). It has certainly been the worst year
for the ruble since 1998 and also the worst for investors and businesses
over the past 15 years.
Not because
of the scale of the stock market or economic collapse —
the second half of 2008 was much worse for the former
and 2009 worse for the latter — but because of the reasons
for the collapse and the uncertainty over what happens next.
In 2009 the issue was a relatively straightforward economic
problem. As we head into 2015 it is the geo-political overhang which
causes the greater concern.
One of the
reasons why 2014 has been such a bad year for the markets and the
economy is because the foundations upon which the economy
and asset valuations are supported were already in a weakened state
well before the events of this year piled on the pressure. I
have written several times about the specific reasons for the decline
in the economy through 2013, i.e. from 3.4 percent growth
in 2012 to only 1.3 percent last year.
The summary
point is that the country had lived too long on hydrocarbon export
revenues, which totalled $3 trillion since 2000, without any serious effort to reform
the economy and simply ran out of time. To be exact, it ran
out of growth drivers as the consumer retrenched and capital
investment fell.
So 2014 was
always going to be a difficult year and, in anticipation
of that, this is why the stock market and ruble both fell
in 2013. They fell harder in January and February even though
the oil price held close to $110 per barrel and ahead
of the Crimea referendum.
Investor
sentiment and business confidence is also a big factor in how
an economy and markets behave. In that respect, 2014 was
probably the worst year ever for Russia, certainly if one counts
the number of international magazine covers which variously demonized
Putin or predicted the destruction of the economy and the
imminent arrival of a color revolution.
By the
time we got to the Crimea vote in mid-March the extraordinarily
disproportionate coverage coming up to the start of the Winter
Olympics had firmly set the tone. Moving on to headlines that claimed
Russia was about to invade former Soviet states was effortless.
The financial
sector sanctions which, in combination with the falling oil price,
collapsed the ruble not just past a few proverbial lines in the
sand but as a bulldozer through whole sand dunes. That also seemed almost inevitable
in a year when nothing seemed to be in Russia's favor.
But actually
that is not quite correct. There were a few bright spots and although
the light at the end of the tunnel is no more than
a flickering candle buffeted by a breeze, the light is still
there. The ruble collapse has not been all bad. True the weaker
currency is a big part of the reason why inflation will likely hit 12
to 13 percent in the first half of next year and why
interest rates will inevitably climb higher before, possibly, starting
to roll back next summer. But the ruble collapse has fully protected
federal budget revenues this year and allowed for modest surplus
while spending has risen by more than 10 percent.
The weak
ruble, along with Russia's self-imposed ban on food imports in August
and on some meats from earlier in the year, has also helped
boost demand for domestic sourced goods. That of course is only
a limited positive as Russia makes relatively few consumer products
and even where it does, a big portion of the parts are imported.
The other
positive from the ruble collapse is the way people have
reacted — they hardly did. Such a major collapse in most other
countries would have led to a run on the banks and social
unrest. I worked in Bangkok in 1997 when the Baht fell — or
was pushed — off a cliff and some banks closed as people took
to the streets. The relative strength of Russia's balance sheet
and fiscal position would certainly be much worse today had
the government had to use more of its savings to stave off
social unrest and a bank sector crisis.
Britain's
wartime Prime Minister Winston Churchill famously remarked that the United
States is a country "which can be relied on to do the right
thing after it has exhausted all other possibilities." That comment is
also applicable to Russia. Crisis can, and often is, a catalyst
for change.
Unfortunately
the last crisis, in 2008-09, did not last long enough to produce
any meaningful changes or reforms. This one will certainly have that longevity
and will provide the opportunity for a more serious effort
to push reforms. The evidence of actions taken, and not
taken this year is encouraging that Putin is more focused on eventually
getting back on an investment-led growth track than in expanding
the confrontation beyond the serious stage already reached.
Through his
clear statements and the actions of the government, Putin has made it
clear that there is a very distinct line between political rhetoric
and the wish, actually need, to remain open for all sources
of business and investment. If that were not the case,
McDonald's on Pushkin Square would not have re-opened, Russian bank cards
would not work abroad and the Hong Kong flight from Frankfurt would
already be several hours longer.
There have also
been more visible positives this year. Who knew that Russians understood irony?
Recall the closing ceremony at the Sochi games which made fun
of the failure to light all of the Olympic rings during
the opening ceremony? The games were also grudgingly accepted as
being a success by those who predicted either a security or
administrative nightmare.
The Sochi
Grand Prix also raised many eyebrows — it seems few people realized there
are palm trees in Russia. The summer was also great, being warmer
and seemingly longer than usual, albeit now a fast fading memory.
Every crisis is
bad but not all crises leave a bad legacy. Sometimes a crisis is
useful to shake things up. But that's for next fall … or next winter
… or the one after that.
Source: http://www.themoscowtimes.com/opinion/article/the-upsides-to-russia-s-ruble-collapse/513786.html
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